Monday, September 19, 2011

The Dis-United Kingdom of Football

The NYT has an interesting story on debate in the UK over the fielding of a UK soccer team for the 2012 Olympics. Organizing such a team is problematic because there is no such team -- in international football the UK plays as England, Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. Here is an excerpt:

While the International Olympic committee recognizes Britain as a
combined team in all sports, FIFA, soccer’s world governing body,
recognizes England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland as separate
teams. And there lies the heart of the controversy.

Soccer officials from the three smaller nations fear that merging a team
for the Olympics could pave the way for FIFA to follow suit, forcing
Britain’s teams to combine into one entry for soccer tournaments like
the World Cup and the European Championships. There is a worry, too,
that the nations would lose their individual seats on the committee that
determines international soccer’s bylaws.

FIFA has given public assurances
that it will still allow all four nations to compete separately apart
from the Olympics, but its pledge has failed to convince everyone.

It is sometimes hard for outsiders to comprehend how deeply tribal
Britain is, and how resistant to the idea that there is a unifying
notion of Britishness. Wales and Northern Ireland have separate
legislative assemblies. And Scotland has its own parliament, now
controlled by the Scottish National Party, whose ultimate goal is national independence.

The rivalry between Scotland and England in particular runs so deep that
when England competes in the World Cup, many Scots employ a position of
“anyone but England,” actively rooting for England’s opponents, whoever
they are.

The soccer associations appear to have no legal right to prevent their
players from participating in the Olympics, and have said they will not
retaliate against those who do. But they are openly discouraging them.

About This Blog

This blog is my professional notebook for commentary and analysis related to sports in society. My main interests are in the governance of international football (soccer), the governance of college athletics and sport as a laboratory for social science research.

In case you are curious I support Arsenal and St. Pauli, and of course, the mighty Colorado Buffaloes.